Arizona

  • Monday Moth

    This beautiful animal is a moth I reared from Quercus palmeri down in the Chiricahua Mountains of Arizona. It’s in the family Gracillariidae and most likely in the genus Acrocercops – according to Dave Wagner it may represent a new species, but that’s not an uncommon thing with small moths. It was fairly abundant, so…

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    LepCourse 2013 – learn about moths and butterflies!

    I’m excited to be participating this year as an instructor for the Lepidoptera Course at the Southwestern Research Station near Portal, Arizona. I’ll be one of eight other instructors who will provide a hands on and intense 9-day long course on the collection, preservation and identification of Lepidoptera. I really can’t imagine a better way…

  • Monday Moth

    This week I’m sharing a tiny, scruffy, and semi-competently spread Nepticulidae in the genus Stigmella from the same light trap of Prescott Arizona as the past few Monday Moths. I usually wouldn’t share a photo of a moth that isn’t in the best condition, but I’m using this as an example of technique. Not only…

  • Monday Moth

    How about another unidentified Gelechiidae from the same location as the previous specimen (nr. Prescott Arizona). I’m taking a stab at this moth being in the genus Chionodes – and it is superficially similar to the species C. continuella. Thankfully there is a monograph of this group (Moths of America North of Mexico, fascicle 7.6)…

  • Monday Moth

      This moth is a good example of what a lot of my moths are at the moment – unidentified! This is certainly a Gelechiidae, you can see the large upturned palps on the front of the head, and a finger-shaped projection on the tips of the hindwings. Just about one of the easiest families…

  • Busy as a Moth

    That’s how the saying goes, right?  Two weeks ago I participated in the 5th annual National Geographic BioBlitz over in Saguaro National Park in Tucson, Arizona.  It was a great excuse to get back into the field and it was the first time I collected Arizona in the fall.  Temps were still pushing the mid…

  • Monday Moth

      This Monday’s moth is a duo of Schinia villosa (Noctuidae) resting on what I am assuming is their host plant (Erigeron sp.).  I snapped this shot around 9,000 feet up on the Kaibab plateau in Northern Arizona last month.  A fire must have burned the area a few years ago because the wildflowers were thick amongst…

  • Net-Winged Beetle

    These large and interesting Lycidae beetles (Lycus fernandezi) were abundant in south eastern Arizona a few weeks ago.   Constantly flying between flowers and moist sand they were making for easy photography targets.  I thought to myself “here is a great opportunity to catch a beetle taking off!”. Wait for it…   Wait for it… Crap….

  • Monday Moth

    Today’s moth is a beautiful and rare species from SE Arizona and Mexico: Lerina incarnata (Erebidae: Arctiinae).  Like many other day flying species it is brilliantly colored and quite likely aposematic.  After all, the host plant is a milkweed and the caterpillar is just as stunning (below).   This image of an old, spread specimen hardly…